Won the lottery - how do I keep the money? The Next CEO of Stack OverflowWhat options do I have at 26 years old, with 1.2 million USD?Is taking a lump sum from a lottery or other prize always preferable to taking the payment plan?If I win the lottery, what is the best way to secure this money?Are lottery winnings taxed based on the ticket date or the redemption date?Winning the lottery and moving to save on taxesHow do I cash a lottery check without proper ID?Taxation on split lottery winnings?How long to save losing lottery tickets (USA)If I won the lottery but gave it all away, would I still have to pay taxes?How do they know if there wasn't any winner in CA for the most recent mega million lottery?Lottery Winnings in United StatesIs playing the lottery worth it in the same way that insurance is?

Anatomically Correct Strange Women In Ponds Distributing Swords

Is 'diverse range' a pleonastic phrase?

Would a completely good Muggle be able to use a wand?

Should I tutor a student who I know has cheated on their homework?

What can we do to stop prior company from asking us questions?

Can I run my washing machine drain line into a condensate pump so it drains better?

Why am I allowed to create multiple unique pointers from a single object?

If/When UK leaves the EU, can a future goverment conduct a referendum to join the EU?

Which tube will fit a -(700 x 25c) wheel?

"In the right combination" vs "with the right combination"?

Would this house-rule that treats advantage as a +1 to the roll instead (and disadvantage as -1) and allows them to stack be balanced?

How did people program for Consoles with multiple CPUs?

Is micro rebar a better way to reinforce concrete than rebar?

How to avoid supervisors with prejudiced views?

Why does standard notation not preserve intervals (visually)

Indicator light circuit

Several mode to write the symbol of a vector

Multiple labels for a single equation

To not tell, not take, and not want

How to count occurrences of text in a file?

Which kind of appliances can one connect to electric sockets located in an airplane's toilet?

Is there a difference between "Fahrstuhl" and "Aufzug"

If a black hole is created from light, can this black hole then move at speed of light?

How to invert MapIndexed on a ragged structure? How to construct a tree from rules?



Won the lottery - how do I keep the money?



The Next CEO of Stack OverflowWhat options do I have at 26 years old, with 1.2 million USD?Is taking a lump sum from a lottery or other prize always preferable to taking the payment plan?If I win the lottery, what is the best way to secure this money?Are lottery winnings taxed based on the ticket date or the redemption date?Winning the lottery and moving to save on taxesHow do I cash a lottery check without proper ID?Taxation on split lottery winnings?How long to save losing lottery tickets (USA)If I won the lottery but gave it all away, would I still have to pay taxes?How do they know if there wasn't any winner in CA for the most recent mega million lottery?Lottery Winnings in United StatesIs playing the lottery worth it in the same way that insurance is?










20















Sadly only a hypothetical question, but here it goes:



If you suddenly gained a large sum of money (several million $/€/whatever) by winning the lottery, some inheritance or anything else, how could one preserve the money so you would stay rich as long as possible?



The reason I'm asking is some hearsay that lottery winners usually lose all their money within 1-2 years. Assuming that no special financial knowledge is available:
What are the possible/most likely reasons to lose/spend the money within a short time and how do you avoid them?



Some causes I can imagine:



  • Casinos and hookers

  • Poor investment choices

  • Advisory contracts signed when receiving the money that quickly drain your account

  • Taxes?









share|improve this question









New contributor




And is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.















  • 4





    I think that this is pretty good advice: reddit.com/r/AskReddit/comments/24vo34/…

    – Workplace GDPR
    18 hours ago






  • 6





    relatives, friends, acquaintances, non-profits, etc. all asking for help.

    – mkennedy
    18 hours ago






  • 19





    “I spent half my money on gambling, alcohol and wild women. The other half I wasted.” -- W.C. Fields

    – Pete Becker
    18 hours ago






  • 2





    If willpower (3/4 of the bullets) is your problem buy a single premium immediate annuity (SPIA)

    – user662852
    16 hours ago






  • 1





    This question is not too broad. "Too broad" means that the question cannot be answered within a few paragraphs.

    – Ben Miller
    14 hours ago
















20















Sadly only a hypothetical question, but here it goes:



If you suddenly gained a large sum of money (several million $/€/whatever) by winning the lottery, some inheritance or anything else, how could one preserve the money so you would stay rich as long as possible?



The reason I'm asking is some hearsay that lottery winners usually lose all their money within 1-2 years. Assuming that no special financial knowledge is available:
What are the possible/most likely reasons to lose/spend the money within a short time and how do you avoid them?



Some causes I can imagine:



  • Casinos and hookers

  • Poor investment choices

  • Advisory contracts signed when receiving the money that quickly drain your account

  • Taxes?









share|improve this question









New contributor




And is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.















  • 4





    I think that this is pretty good advice: reddit.com/r/AskReddit/comments/24vo34/…

    – Workplace GDPR
    18 hours ago






  • 6





    relatives, friends, acquaintances, non-profits, etc. all asking for help.

    – mkennedy
    18 hours ago






  • 19





    “I spent half my money on gambling, alcohol and wild women. The other half I wasted.” -- W.C. Fields

    – Pete Becker
    18 hours ago






  • 2





    If willpower (3/4 of the bullets) is your problem buy a single premium immediate annuity (SPIA)

    – user662852
    16 hours ago






  • 1





    This question is not too broad. "Too broad" means that the question cannot be answered within a few paragraphs.

    – Ben Miller
    14 hours ago














20












20








20


5






Sadly only a hypothetical question, but here it goes:



If you suddenly gained a large sum of money (several million $/€/whatever) by winning the lottery, some inheritance or anything else, how could one preserve the money so you would stay rich as long as possible?



The reason I'm asking is some hearsay that lottery winners usually lose all their money within 1-2 years. Assuming that no special financial knowledge is available:
What are the possible/most likely reasons to lose/spend the money within a short time and how do you avoid them?



Some causes I can imagine:



  • Casinos and hookers

  • Poor investment choices

  • Advisory contracts signed when receiving the money that quickly drain your account

  • Taxes?









share|improve this question









New contributor




And is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.












Sadly only a hypothetical question, but here it goes:



If you suddenly gained a large sum of money (several million $/€/whatever) by winning the lottery, some inheritance or anything else, how could one preserve the money so you would stay rich as long as possible?



The reason I'm asking is some hearsay that lottery winners usually lose all their money within 1-2 years. Assuming that no special financial knowledge is available:
What are the possible/most likely reasons to lose/spend the money within a short time and how do you avoid them?



Some causes I can imagine:



  • Casinos and hookers

  • Poor investment choices

  • Advisory contracts signed when receiving the money that quickly drain your account

  • Taxes?






savings lottery






share|improve this question









New contributor




And is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.











share|improve this question









New contributor




And is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.









share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited 7 hours ago









Brythan

17.8k64059




17.8k64059






New contributor




And is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.









asked 18 hours ago









AndAnd

10414




10414




New contributor




And is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.





New contributor





And is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.






And is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.







  • 4





    I think that this is pretty good advice: reddit.com/r/AskReddit/comments/24vo34/…

    – Workplace GDPR
    18 hours ago






  • 6





    relatives, friends, acquaintances, non-profits, etc. all asking for help.

    – mkennedy
    18 hours ago






  • 19





    “I spent half my money on gambling, alcohol and wild women. The other half I wasted.” -- W.C. Fields

    – Pete Becker
    18 hours ago






  • 2





    If willpower (3/4 of the bullets) is your problem buy a single premium immediate annuity (SPIA)

    – user662852
    16 hours ago






  • 1





    This question is not too broad. "Too broad" means that the question cannot be answered within a few paragraphs.

    – Ben Miller
    14 hours ago













  • 4





    I think that this is pretty good advice: reddit.com/r/AskReddit/comments/24vo34/…

    – Workplace GDPR
    18 hours ago






  • 6





    relatives, friends, acquaintances, non-profits, etc. all asking for help.

    – mkennedy
    18 hours ago






  • 19





    “I spent half my money on gambling, alcohol and wild women. The other half I wasted.” -- W.C. Fields

    – Pete Becker
    18 hours ago






  • 2





    If willpower (3/4 of the bullets) is your problem buy a single premium immediate annuity (SPIA)

    – user662852
    16 hours ago






  • 1





    This question is not too broad. "Too broad" means that the question cannot be answered within a few paragraphs.

    – Ben Miller
    14 hours ago








4




4





I think that this is pretty good advice: reddit.com/r/AskReddit/comments/24vo34/…

– Workplace GDPR
18 hours ago





I think that this is pretty good advice: reddit.com/r/AskReddit/comments/24vo34/…

– Workplace GDPR
18 hours ago




6




6





relatives, friends, acquaintances, non-profits, etc. all asking for help.

– mkennedy
18 hours ago





relatives, friends, acquaintances, non-profits, etc. all asking for help.

– mkennedy
18 hours ago




19




19





“I spent half my money on gambling, alcohol and wild women. The other half I wasted.” -- W.C. Fields

– Pete Becker
18 hours ago





“I spent half my money on gambling, alcohol and wild women. The other half I wasted.” -- W.C. Fields

– Pete Becker
18 hours ago




2




2





If willpower (3/4 of the bullets) is your problem buy a single premium immediate annuity (SPIA)

– user662852
16 hours ago





If willpower (3/4 of the bullets) is your problem buy a single premium immediate annuity (SPIA)

– user662852
16 hours ago




1




1





This question is not too broad. "Too broad" means that the question cannot be answered within a few paragraphs.

– Ben Miller
14 hours ago






This question is not too broad. "Too broad" means that the question cannot be answered within a few paragraphs.

– Ben Miller
14 hours ago











7 Answers
7






active

oldest

votes


















20














All of the above can happen. Lottery winners are invariably people with little experience in handling extremely large amounts of money.



For most lottery winners, everything about their life changes overnight. They typically take the lump sum prize, giving them immediate access to a fortune, with no guaranteed income beyond that. They quit their job, move to a new town, buy a ridiculously large house/car/boat, and give away expensive gifts, having no experience with proper budgeting. They have no experience investing, but there are long lines of “advisors” who want to tell them how to invest, taking advantage of their naivety. Every personal relationship they have changes.



Bankruptcy is not the only concern. Depression, divorce, and suicide are common among big lottery winners.



To avoid all this, if you someday find yourself in this situation, I would recommend the following:



  • As much as possible, try to keep it a secret. (I don’t know how possible this is.)

  • For at least the first year, try to change your life as little as possible. Don’t quit your job, don’t move, don’t buy any ridiculous toys, don’t make any risky investments.

  • If it is an option, take the annuity prize instead of the lump sum. That way, if you fail at the above advice and spend it all or are scammed out of it, you will have another payment coming next year.

More reading:



  • CNBC: Here’s why lottery winners go broke

  • New York Times, Jan 12, 2016: Dear Powerball Winner: Take Our Advice and Take the Annuity





share|improve this answer


















  • 2





    Sadly, you can take loans based on your annuity income. So it's still possible to "get a lump sum out of the annuity" in an (extended) moment of weakness.

    – PotatoEngineer
    12 hours ago






  • 2





    Yes and that's also inefficient, so it costs you cash to even do that. You are better off taking the lump sum, investing it well, and managing it like a grown-up.

    – Harper
    11 hours ago











  • Interestingly, this same thing tends to happen to highly-paid athletes after they retire, and often for the same reasons. Most people grossly underestimate how much money it will take to retire, and what sounds like a lifetime's worth of money isn't always that.

    – bta
    6 hours ago


















8














When you ever get suprised by a large sum of money, then do not immediately quit your job and do not immediately spend it on the first thing that comes to mind.



Pay the tax on your winnings



Before you start planning what to do with your winnings, make sure you know how much of it you are actually going to see. In many jurisdictions you need to pay quite a large percentage of tax on any lottery winnings. You really do not want to spend all your money and then get hit by a huge tax bill a year later which you can't pay.



Pay off any debts.



The first thing you should do with any large windfall is pay off any open debts you still have. There is rarely a reason to have debt if you have cash in hand. The only reason to not pay off a debt is if that debt contract comes with a penalty for paying it off early. But even that might be worth it if the interest is high enough. Do the math!



Reduce your fixcosts



Another thing you might consider in the same vein is if there is anything else you can do to reduce your fixcosts in the long run. If there is anything you are renting or leasing, consider if it would be cheaper in the long run to buy that thing (house and car are the prime candidates for this). But keep in mind that the thing might not live forever and might incur fixcosts in its own over time for maintenance.



For example, if you buy a huge mansion, you also need to pay for maintaining a huge mansion (tax, insurance, heating, repairs...). There is one case of a guy in Germany who owned this cute little house. He ended up selling it to the government for one symbolic euro. Why would he do that? Because he ran out of money to maintain it.



If you still have money left, let's consider the real question:



Can you quit your job?



Your money might look like a lot, but is it really enough to pay for your lifestyle until you are dead?



There are basically three options you might or might not be able to afford.



Option 1: Live off of interest, die rich and leave everything to your heirs.



Invest your money in a smart but secure way and finance your lifestyle with the interest. Keep in mind that any investment which promises a more than slightly higher return than the central bank interest rate in your country will have some form of risk or additional work on your behalf involved. Any investment which promises a lot more is usually too good to be true. Also remember to take the rate of inflation of your local currency into account. So the actual annual yield you can expect from your winnings is the interest rate minus the rate of inflation. Do the math and check if this is enough to fund your lifestyle.



Option 2: Consume the pile of money, live good, die poor, and leave nothing to your heirs



Instead of hoarding all the money, you slowly spend it over the course of your life in a way that you don't run out until you die. In order to calculate if it is enough money to do that, consider the following:



  • How much money do you need per month to maintain your current lifestyle?

  • How much will that cost increase due to inflation in the future?

  • How long do you expect to live?

  • How much additional money will you get out of any pension plans you are already entitled to?

Do the math and estimate if your money is actually enough to finance your lifestyle until you die. You might be surprised how expensive it actually is to live for several decades. There is also one big unknown variable in this calculation: Unless you are already suffering from a leathal health issue, you will likely have no idea how long you are going to live. There are people who live a very unhealthy lifestyle, and yet live beyond 100.



Option 3: Start your own company



If you already had a great business idea and all you lacked was the starting capital to realize it, then this might be your chance. A few words of warning, though:



  • If you planned to live the rest of your life in idle luxury, then this path is pretty much the exact opposite. Being the boss of your own company is not as easy as you might think. If you start your own business, you will likely spend more time working than you ever did before. You will also have a lot more stress. If your company isn't profitable, then you suffer the financial consequences. If your company breaks any laws, then you might even face the legal consequences personally. And there are really a lot of laws companies needs to follow.

  • Make sure you actually know what you are doing. The majority of new companies don't survive longer than a few years before they go bankrupt. If you jump head over heels into an industry you know nothing about, you are going to fail badly. Ideally you would start a company in the same industry where you were already working before so you can use your experience. But even then it will pay off if you do your homework and educate yourself about what it means to own, manage and lead a company.





share|improve this answer




















  • 2





    Regarding option 3 "If you want to be a Millionaire, start with a billion dollars and launch a new airline." Lots of people who came into money (lottery winners, athletes, etc) have tried to start businesses and lost their money.

    – stannius
    7 hours ago












  • @stannius I think that's covered by the second bullet under option 3

    – user73687
    6 hours ago



















3














For most people this deserves the answer of "Index fund".



Take first payment, go to local bank, ask to open index fund mutual account. Put it all in. Don't retire just yet. Don't tell anybody else you have it.



Second payment, put most of it in. Don't upgrade your lifestyle.



Third payment, put most of it in.



The general idea is to put away a good fraction on what is coming. Eventually you'll want to live off the rest of it and not work anymore. The higher standard of living you want, the later this is.



When the lottery annuity runs out, you want to be able to live on the investment income alone. The investment income of two million on the index fund is comfortable.






share|improve this answer


















  • 2





    Don't go to local bank, go online to one (or several) of the mutual fund companies such as Vanguard or T. Rowe Price. And do a bit of diversification: a US index fund, a international fund, maybe a percentage in bonds.

    – jamesqf
    11 hours ago






  • 2





    @jamesqf: There is nothing wrong with your advice; I wrote something so simple that any Joe could do it on purpose.

    – Joshua
    11 hours ago











  • Would it be more profitable to take the annuity and invest monthly or to take the lump sum and invest it all at once? Theoretically, that is, assuming you aren't going to spend any of it

    – Kai
    3 hours ago












  • @Kai: Depends on the percent loss for the lump sum.

    – Joshua
    2 hours ago


















2














Talk to a lawyer who specializes in family trusts and establishing family charitable foundations for "high net-worth individuals". Do this before you sign the lottery ticket.



If you were planning to "do good for the world", you will be able to do a lot more good if you can manage to put the lottery ticket in a tax-advantaged form before cashing it in.






share|improve this answer






























    2














    Some causes I can imagine:



    • you

    • you

    • you

    • you

    The simple fact is, God doesn't make you do stupid things with money.



    Anyway, you're on the right track: you know the threat is there, you're asking the question.



    It's all about financial education and beliefs



    There's a grand unification issue at hand, and it's not strategies to dodge "this money-sink", or "that money-sink". The key issue is financial education. Understanding what money is and can do for you. Yeah, yeah, everyone thinks they know the answer to that, "it can buy me blackjack and hookers" -- and that's the problem. Everyone has an incomplete answer, and so they don't see the other, much more lucrative options available to those with a fuller education.



    This is literally the difference between the rich and the poor. The rich believe money attracts more money; the poor believe money is something that only leaves their hands. That is political, even religious to each of them; they carefully collect evidence that confirms their preconceived notions and reject evidence that does not.



    For instance, when Wall Street tanks, the poor declare they've taken a horrible loss, and sell off their stocks, consider this an important life-lesson, and swear to never buy stocks again. All of that jibes with their core beliefs about money, so it makes perfect sense to them. The rich take an even worse hit. But their attitude is "Oh look, Wall Street is having a half-off sale!" and they buy all the additional stocks they can. Later, of course, the market recovers. The poor sold low, locking in their losses; they are left behind and their fears are fulfilled. "See, I was right!" Meanwhile the rich see their losses recover, and they bought even more, so they make out like bandits. "See, I was right!"



    All those paragraphs to say, your biggest enemy is your existing, entrenched, self-beliefs about money. I don't care who you are. They are wrong. Because they're incomplete. For best success, get rid of 'em.



    It's a big world out there



    Universities also have lottery winnings. Some very rich alumnus dies, and leaves them $50 million in an endowment. This actually is so common that there is very strict law about what must be done. The law (which literally has "Prudent" in its name) requires aggressive investment of the money to assure growth. That fried every brain cell I had about money, when I became someone responsible for a $8 million endowment. Everything I knew about money is wrong.



    An endowment is "forever income". The money (the capital, or corpus) is invested, and only a small amount (3-7% a year) is drawn off. This funds programs, faculty members, etc. All the other investment gains are folded back into the endowment to ensure it grows against inflation. I never realized investments could generate meangful income forever, I always thought investments would eventually be used up.



    So, right off the bat. The first $2 million of your lottery winnings, you slap them in an "endowment-like thing" and draw them down at a conservative 4%. This will give you $80,000 a year and still leave room for the "endowment" to grow, so the $80,000 will also grow with inflation. That funds your basic needs. (Also it's taxed as long-term capital gains, at about half normal tax rates).



    If you wanted to go kowabunga, make it $5 million and $200,000/year. If you can't make your life work on $200k/year, good grief!



    Anyway, with your basic life needs covered, now you can consider the rest of it more investable. Right off the bat you could just throw it in the same account and draw it down at 4-6% a year, assuring a handsome salary for life.



    By the way, common mistake here. Don't dissociate yourself from your money and think of it as "not you", "mystery money", "not really yours" or "junk/mad money". And because of that, people don't respect the money, and mistreat (waste) it. Before they realize it, they are mistreating/wasting all money, and that is the road to perdition. It is your money. You paid taxes on it. Make it part of your personal identity.



    And if your ethics say "I cannot be wealthy or have airs or superiority over others", boy have I got an option for you, at the end.



    Anyway, you could just go off and buy a yacht (hole in the water you pour money into), but always think in terms of endowments. How will I maintain the yacht? If it cost $300,000 a year to keep up, multply that by 25 and put $7.5 million in an internal endowment for the yacht's upkeep. Suddenly you realize that $2 million yacht will tie up $9.5 million of your capital, it's a different decision, eh?



    But I don't recommend too many things that are a money sink. I recommend you focus on things which have a fair chance of doing well.



    • Social investing. Doing the endowment thing, but investing in companies which correspond to your beliefs. This won't do as well as index funds, and the 'management costs' (picking good stocks) will be much higher.


    • Real estate. Normally endowments are skittish of real estate investing because it's "high maintenance" and often doesn't do as well as pure market investments. But if you want to get into it, especially if you have sweat-equity to put into it, and your local market is favorable, then rental properties may be a good investment for you. Always treat it as your business that is expected to make money on its own and measure it against any other investment.


    • Small business. However this is a trap for lottery-winner types; they often find themselves making emotional investments in loser businesses that no sane venture capitalist would touch: they aren't heroes, they're suckers. Be a minority investor along with real sharks, and managers who have invested their life savings (have "skin in the game"). And have competent legal counsel involved and listen to them.


    • Your own business. But again, swim with the sharks: seek to involve independent VC. If the VC says "ain't touching it with a 10 foot pole" then you have a loser business. If they say "I want more share for my money", you might have a winner, but get good help making it work.


    Charity



    The trick with charitable contributions is that you really need to plan it even before you sign the lottery ticket. Because that lottery ticket will be taxed at nearly 50% (Federal and state), and you want to shield as much of that income as possible from taxation.



    So this is where you need to build a legal team (don't worry, they'll work on a "we'll bill you" basis) and strategize the best way to turn the unsigned lottery ticket into the maximum charitable contribution for the minimum possible taxes, as well as figure out all the tax angles. For instance you might form a nonprofit, then form a partnership which owns the lottery ticket; thus you and your nonprofit split the winnings and the nonprofit's share is never taxed in the first place. This is peculiar to state laws.



    Anyway, you then have a nonprofit that controls a considerable nest-egg. You know what to do! Straight into an endowment with it! Then this nonprofit can give donations to other nonprofits pretty much as you direct. This can be done in several forms: A private foundation, or a simpler-for-you donor-advised fund for instance.



    Another thing that can happen, but only with careful tax-law management: you can enter the employ of an existing nonprofit, and use your directable charity money to support them. You pay normal taxes on your salary. This method is very widely abused, so there are significant limits on the method; to start with, your salary has to be market competitive.






    share|improve this answer
































      0














      I seriously doubt that all, or even most lottery winners lose all their money within 1-2 years, but, whatever. You don't need to win the lottery to lose your money on casinos and hookers, poor investment choices, etc. Plenty of people accomplish that just fine without a massive windfall driving it.



      Preparation is the key. I often joke about what I would do if I win the lottery, but to a certain extent, it's not really a joke. How often have you seen a lottery winner get interviewed, and when asked what they are going to do with the money, they say, "Oh my gosh, I don't know!" Sadly, they really don't know, which is maddening, because why would you buy a ticket without at least dreaming of winning?



      Step #1: Have a plan. As ridiculous as it might be, I have a plan. Someday, when they interview me, I'll tell them exactly what I'm going to do with the money. I have a list of things that has been very consistent for years. When that day comes and I win, it's just a simple process of checking off my list. I might do some stupid things with the winnings, but I'll have done a lot of smart things too. Hopefully the smart will greatly outweigh the dumb.



      Step #2: Handle your money wisely today. You don't need to win the lottery to have a financial advisor. If you have any money available for investing, you should have one. I have one I've worked with for 20 years. Should I win the lottery tomorrow, I've already got a trusted advisor in place.



      Start preparing now for that big win. Even if it never happens, you will be much better off at least thinking about your money and planning your future. Hopefully you will start putting the pieces in place that will help you plan for that future with or without a massive windfall.






      share|improve this answer






























        0














        People overextend



        First problem: you're not as rich as you think you are. Say you just won $768 million from the PowerBall Lottery. You have the following reductions:



        1. That's the thirty year annuity amount. The cash amount is more like $400 million.

        2. Taxes. Figure on keeping half, or $200 million.

        OK, but $200 million still seems like a lot of money. But look at the changes you're making.



        1. If you're 30 and quit your jobs (married couple), that's about $60,000 a year for forty years. There's $2.4 million gone.

        2. You buy $100 million in houses: a $40 million mansion; a $20 million vacation house; another $20 million vacation house; several more million dollar houses for friends and family.

        3. Buy cars for everyone.

        4. Buy more expensive food and travel (first class of course).

        5. Buy expensive wine/champagne, even though you don't know why it's more expensive.

        6. Cosign some loans.

        7. Invest in some sure things.

        So after you find out that your sure thing investments are worthless, you find that your cosigned loans are due since your friends and family couldn't afford them. Then you realize that your houses cost money after the purchase as well. You have to pay property taxes and utilities as well as pay people to take care of the houses when you aren't there. You have a lifestyle that costs $500,000 a year to maintain but no income. If you live eighty more years, that's $40 million.



        Budget



        To avoid this, you have to budget. If you have $200 million after taxes, put most of it, say $150 million, into safe investments like index funds and a significant (albeit much smaller amount) into banks. A rough rule of thumb is that five years of expenses should be in banks after retiring. Each year, take a portion of the amount from your investments, say 2%, and put it in your bank accounts. That's the money on which you live.



        You have $50 million remaining. This is the money that you can use for capital purchases, like houses. First divide it in two. This is because capital purchases have expenses. Now you have $25 million in savings and $25 million that you can spend. Spend the $25 million. Now, only use the $25 million in savings to pay off maintenance costs on your purchases.



        Never borrow



        It's easy to borrow when you have lots of money. But while you have wealth, you have no separate income. There's no reason to borrow. Any money you will have, you already have. Borrowing shifts future income's spending power into the present. But you have no future income. You are better off spending the money now and saving the interest. If you've already spent all your money for the year, then you really don't want to spend more. Sell a car or vacation home instead. Borrowing is a sign of overextension when you are retired. Don't do it.






        share|improve this answer























          Your Answer








          StackExchange.ready(function()
          var channelOptions =
          tags: "".split(" "),
          id: "93"
          ;
          initTagRenderer("".split(" "), "".split(" "), channelOptions);

          StackExchange.using("externalEditor", function()
          // Have to fire editor after snippets, if snippets enabled
          if (StackExchange.settings.snippets.snippetsEnabled)
          StackExchange.using("snippets", function()
          createEditor();
          );

          else
          createEditor();

          );

          function createEditor()
          StackExchange.prepareEditor(
          heartbeatType: 'answer',
          autoActivateHeartbeat: false,
          convertImagesToLinks: true,
          noModals: true,
          showLowRepImageUploadWarning: true,
          reputationToPostImages: 10,
          bindNavPrevention: true,
          postfix: "",
          imageUploader:
          brandingHtml: "Powered by u003ca class="icon-imgur-white" href="https://imgur.com/"u003eu003c/au003e",
          contentPolicyHtml: "User contributions licensed under u003ca href="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/"u003ecc by-sa 3.0 with attribution requiredu003c/au003e u003ca href="https://stackoverflow.com/legal/content-policy"u003e(content policy)u003c/au003e",
          allowUrls: true
          ,
          noCode: true, onDemand: true,
          discardSelector: ".discard-answer"
          ,immediatelyShowMarkdownHelp:true
          );



          );






          And is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.









          draft saved

          draft discarded


















          StackExchange.ready(
          function ()
          StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fmoney.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f107110%2fwon-the-lottery-how-do-i-keep-the-money%23new-answer', 'question_page');

          );

          Post as a guest















          Required, but never shown

























          7 Answers
          7






          active

          oldest

          votes








          7 Answers
          7






          active

          oldest

          votes









          active

          oldest

          votes






          active

          oldest

          votes









          20














          All of the above can happen. Lottery winners are invariably people with little experience in handling extremely large amounts of money.



          For most lottery winners, everything about their life changes overnight. They typically take the lump sum prize, giving them immediate access to a fortune, with no guaranteed income beyond that. They quit their job, move to a new town, buy a ridiculously large house/car/boat, and give away expensive gifts, having no experience with proper budgeting. They have no experience investing, but there are long lines of “advisors” who want to tell them how to invest, taking advantage of their naivety. Every personal relationship they have changes.



          Bankruptcy is not the only concern. Depression, divorce, and suicide are common among big lottery winners.



          To avoid all this, if you someday find yourself in this situation, I would recommend the following:



          • As much as possible, try to keep it a secret. (I don’t know how possible this is.)

          • For at least the first year, try to change your life as little as possible. Don’t quit your job, don’t move, don’t buy any ridiculous toys, don’t make any risky investments.

          • If it is an option, take the annuity prize instead of the lump sum. That way, if you fail at the above advice and spend it all or are scammed out of it, you will have another payment coming next year.

          More reading:



          • CNBC: Here’s why lottery winners go broke

          • New York Times, Jan 12, 2016: Dear Powerball Winner: Take Our Advice and Take the Annuity





          share|improve this answer


















          • 2





            Sadly, you can take loans based on your annuity income. So it's still possible to "get a lump sum out of the annuity" in an (extended) moment of weakness.

            – PotatoEngineer
            12 hours ago






          • 2





            Yes and that's also inefficient, so it costs you cash to even do that. You are better off taking the lump sum, investing it well, and managing it like a grown-up.

            – Harper
            11 hours ago











          • Interestingly, this same thing tends to happen to highly-paid athletes after they retire, and often for the same reasons. Most people grossly underestimate how much money it will take to retire, and what sounds like a lifetime's worth of money isn't always that.

            – bta
            6 hours ago















          20














          All of the above can happen. Lottery winners are invariably people with little experience in handling extremely large amounts of money.



          For most lottery winners, everything about their life changes overnight. They typically take the lump sum prize, giving them immediate access to a fortune, with no guaranteed income beyond that. They quit their job, move to a new town, buy a ridiculously large house/car/boat, and give away expensive gifts, having no experience with proper budgeting. They have no experience investing, but there are long lines of “advisors” who want to tell them how to invest, taking advantage of their naivety. Every personal relationship they have changes.



          Bankruptcy is not the only concern. Depression, divorce, and suicide are common among big lottery winners.



          To avoid all this, if you someday find yourself in this situation, I would recommend the following:



          • As much as possible, try to keep it a secret. (I don’t know how possible this is.)

          • For at least the first year, try to change your life as little as possible. Don’t quit your job, don’t move, don’t buy any ridiculous toys, don’t make any risky investments.

          • If it is an option, take the annuity prize instead of the lump sum. That way, if you fail at the above advice and spend it all or are scammed out of it, you will have another payment coming next year.

          More reading:



          • CNBC: Here’s why lottery winners go broke

          • New York Times, Jan 12, 2016: Dear Powerball Winner: Take Our Advice and Take the Annuity





          share|improve this answer


















          • 2





            Sadly, you can take loans based on your annuity income. So it's still possible to "get a lump sum out of the annuity" in an (extended) moment of weakness.

            – PotatoEngineer
            12 hours ago






          • 2





            Yes and that's also inefficient, so it costs you cash to even do that. You are better off taking the lump sum, investing it well, and managing it like a grown-up.

            – Harper
            11 hours ago











          • Interestingly, this same thing tends to happen to highly-paid athletes after they retire, and often for the same reasons. Most people grossly underestimate how much money it will take to retire, and what sounds like a lifetime's worth of money isn't always that.

            – bta
            6 hours ago













          20












          20








          20







          All of the above can happen. Lottery winners are invariably people with little experience in handling extremely large amounts of money.



          For most lottery winners, everything about their life changes overnight. They typically take the lump sum prize, giving them immediate access to a fortune, with no guaranteed income beyond that. They quit their job, move to a new town, buy a ridiculously large house/car/boat, and give away expensive gifts, having no experience with proper budgeting. They have no experience investing, but there are long lines of “advisors” who want to tell them how to invest, taking advantage of their naivety. Every personal relationship they have changes.



          Bankruptcy is not the only concern. Depression, divorce, and suicide are common among big lottery winners.



          To avoid all this, if you someday find yourself in this situation, I would recommend the following:



          • As much as possible, try to keep it a secret. (I don’t know how possible this is.)

          • For at least the first year, try to change your life as little as possible. Don’t quit your job, don’t move, don’t buy any ridiculous toys, don’t make any risky investments.

          • If it is an option, take the annuity prize instead of the lump sum. That way, if you fail at the above advice and spend it all or are scammed out of it, you will have another payment coming next year.

          More reading:



          • CNBC: Here’s why lottery winners go broke

          • New York Times, Jan 12, 2016: Dear Powerball Winner: Take Our Advice and Take the Annuity





          share|improve this answer













          All of the above can happen. Lottery winners are invariably people with little experience in handling extremely large amounts of money.



          For most lottery winners, everything about their life changes overnight. They typically take the lump sum prize, giving them immediate access to a fortune, with no guaranteed income beyond that. They quit their job, move to a new town, buy a ridiculously large house/car/boat, and give away expensive gifts, having no experience with proper budgeting. They have no experience investing, but there are long lines of “advisors” who want to tell them how to invest, taking advantage of their naivety. Every personal relationship they have changes.



          Bankruptcy is not the only concern. Depression, divorce, and suicide are common among big lottery winners.



          To avoid all this, if you someday find yourself in this situation, I would recommend the following:



          • As much as possible, try to keep it a secret. (I don’t know how possible this is.)

          • For at least the first year, try to change your life as little as possible. Don’t quit your job, don’t move, don’t buy any ridiculous toys, don’t make any risky investments.

          • If it is an option, take the annuity prize instead of the lump sum. That way, if you fail at the above advice and spend it all or are scammed out of it, you will have another payment coming next year.

          More reading:



          • CNBC: Here’s why lottery winners go broke

          • New York Times, Jan 12, 2016: Dear Powerball Winner: Take Our Advice and Take the Annuity






          share|improve this answer












          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer










          answered 18 hours ago









          Ben MillerBen Miller

          81.6k21224292




          81.6k21224292







          • 2





            Sadly, you can take loans based on your annuity income. So it's still possible to "get a lump sum out of the annuity" in an (extended) moment of weakness.

            – PotatoEngineer
            12 hours ago






          • 2





            Yes and that's also inefficient, so it costs you cash to even do that. You are better off taking the lump sum, investing it well, and managing it like a grown-up.

            – Harper
            11 hours ago











          • Interestingly, this same thing tends to happen to highly-paid athletes after they retire, and often for the same reasons. Most people grossly underestimate how much money it will take to retire, and what sounds like a lifetime's worth of money isn't always that.

            – bta
            6 hours ago












          • 2





            Sadly, you can take loans based on your annuity income. So it's still possible to "get a lump sum out of the annuity" in an (extended) moment of weakness.

            – PotatoEngineer
            12 hours ago






          • 2





            Yes and that's also inefficient, so it costs you cash to even do that. You are better off taking the lump sum, investing it well, and managing it like a grown-up.

            – Harper
            11 hours ago











          • Interestingly, this same thing tends to happen to highly-paid athletes after they retire, and often for the same reasons. Most people grossly underestimate how much money it will take to retire, and what sounds like a lifetime's worth of money isn't always that.

            – bta
            6 hours ago







          2




          2





          Sadly, you can take loans based on your annuity income. So it's still possible to "get a lump sum out of the annuity" in an (extended) moment of weakness.

          – PotatoEngineer
          12 hours ago





          Sadly, you can take loans based on your annuity income. So it's still possible to "get a lump sum out of the annuity" in an (extended) moment of weakness.

          – PotatoEngineer
          12 hours ago




          2




          2





          Yes and that's also inefficient, so it costs you cash to even do that. You are better off taking the lump sum, investing it well, and managing it like a grown-up.

          – Harper
          11 hours ago





          Yes and that's also inefficient, so it costs you cash to even do that. You are better off taking the lump sum, investing it well, and managing it like a grown-up.

          – Harper
          11 hours ago













          Interestingly, this same thing tends to happen to highly-paid athletes after they retire, and often for the same reasons. Most people grossly underestimate how much money it will take to retire, and what sounds like a lifetime's worth of money isn't always that.

          – bta
          6 hours ago





          Interestingly, this same thing tends to happen to highly-paid athletes after they retire, and often for the same reasons. Most people grossly underestimate how much money it will take to retire, and what sounds like a lifetime's worth of money isn't always that.

          – bta
          6 hours ago













          8














          When you ever get suprised by a large sum of money, then do not immediately quit your job and do not immediately spend it on the first thing that comes to mind.



          Pay the tax on your winnings



          Before you start planning what to do with your winnings, make sure you know how much of it you are actually going to see. In many jurisdictions you need to pay quite a large percentage of tax on any lottery winnings. You really do not want to spend all your money and then get hit by a huge tax bill a year later which you can't pay.



          Pay off any debts.



          The first thing you should do with any large windfall is pay off any open debts you still have. There is rarely a reason to have debt if you have cash in hand. The only reason to not pay off a debt is if that debt contract comes with a penalty for paying it off early. But even that might be worth it if the interest is high enough. Do the math!



          Reduce your fixcosts



          Another thing you might consider in the same vein is if there is anything else you can do to reduce your fixcosts in the long run. If there is anything you are renting or leasing, consider if it would be cheaper in the long run to buy that thing (house and car are the prime candidates for this). But keep in mind that the thing might not live forever and might incur fixcosts in its own over time for maintenance.



          For example, if you buy a huge mansion, you also need to pay for maintaining a huge mansion (tax, insurance, heating, repairs...). There is one case of a guy in Germany who owned this cute little house. He ended up selling it to the government for one symbolic euro. Why would he do that? Because he ran out of money to maintain it.



          If you still have money left, let's consider the real question:



          Can you quit your job?



          Your money might look like a lot, but is it really enough to pay for your lifestyle until you are dead?



          There are basically three options you might or might not be able to afford.



          Option 1: Live off of interest, die rich and leave everything to your heirs.



          Invest your money in a smart but secure way and finance your lifestyle with the interest. Keep in mind that any investment which promises a more than slightly higher return than the central bank interest rate in your country will have some form of risk or additional work on your behalf involved. Any investment which promises a lot more is usually too good to be true. Also remember to take the rate of inflation of your local currency into account. So the actual annual yield you can expect from your winnings is the interest rate minus the rate of inflation. Do the math and check if this is enough to fund your lifestyle.



          Option 2: Consume the pile of money, live good, die poor, and leave nothing to your heirs



          Instead of hoarding all the money, you slowly spend it over the course of your life in a way that you don't run out until you die. In order to calculate if it is enough money to do that, consider the following:



          • How much money do you need per month to maintain your current lifestyle?

          • How much will that cost increase due to inflation in the future?

          • How long do you expect to live?

          • How much additional money will you get out of any pension plans you are already entitled to?

          Do the math and estimate if your money is actually enough to finance your lifestyle until you die. You might be surprised how expensive it actually is to live for several decades. There is also one big unknown variable in this calculation: Unless you are already suffering from a leathal health issue, you will likely have no idea how long you are going to live. There are people who live a very unhealthy lifestyle, and yet live beyond 100.



          Option 3: Start your own company



          If you already had a great business idea and all you lacked was the starting capital to realize it, then this might be your chance. A few words of warning, though:



          • If you planned to live the rest of your life in idle luxury, then this path is pretty much the exact opposite. Being the boss of your own company is not as easy as you might think. If you start your own business, you will likely spend more time working than you ever did before. You will also have a lot more stress. If your company isn't profitable, then you suffer the financial consequences. If your company breaks any laws, then you might even face the legal consequences personally. And there are really a lot of laws companies needs to follow.

          • Make sure you actually know what you are doing. The majority of new companies don't survive longer than a few years before they go bankrupt. If you jump head over heels into an industry you know nothing about, you are going to fail badly. Ideally you would start a company in the same industry where you were already working before so you can use your experience. But even then it will pay off if you do your homework and educate yourself about what it means to own, manage and lead a company.





          share|improve this answer




















          • 2





            Regarding option 3 "If you want to be a Millionaire, start with a billion dollars and launch a new airline." Lots of people who came into money (lottery winners, athletes, etc) have tried to start businesses and lost their money.

            – stannius
            7 hours ago












          • @stannius I think that's covered by the second bullet under option 3

            – user73687
            6 hours ago
















          8














          When you ever get suprised by a large sum of money, then do not immediately quit your job and do not immediately spend it on the first thing that comes to mind.



          Pay the tax on your winnings



          Before you start planning what to do with your winnings, make sure you know how much of it you are actually going to see. In many jurisdictions you need to pay quite a large percentage of tax on any lottery winnings. You really do not want to spend all your money and then get hit by a huge tax bill a year later which you can't pay.



          Pay off any debts.



          The first thing you should do with any large windfall is pay off any open debts you still have. There is rarely a reason to have debt if you have cash in hand. The only reason to not pay off a debt is if that debt contract comes with a penalty for paying it off early. But even that might be worth it if the interest is high enough. Do the math!



          Reduce your fixcosts



          Another thing you might consider in the same vein is if there is anything else you can do to reduce your fixcosts in the long run. If there is anything you are renting or leasing, consider if it would be cheaper in the long run to buy that thing (house and car are the prime candidates for this). But keep in mind that the thing might not live forever and might incur fixcosts in its own over time for maintenance.



          For example, if you buy a huge mansion, you also need to pay for maintaining a huge mansion (tax, insurance, heating, repairs...). There is one case of a guy in Germany who owned this cute little house. He ended up selling it to the government for one symbolic euro. Why would he do that? Because he ran out of money to maintain it.



          If you still have money left, let's consider the real question:



          Can you quit your job?



          Your money might look like a lot, but is it really enough to pay for your lifestyle until you are dead?



          There are basically three options you might or might not be able to afford.



          Option 1: Live off of interest, die rich and leave everything to your heirs.



          Invest your money in a smart but secure way and finance your lifestyle with the interest. Keep in mind that any investment which promises a more than slightly higher return than the central bank interest rate in your country will have some form of risk or additional work on your behalf involved. Any investment which promises a lot more is usually too good to be true. Also remember to take the rate of inflation of your local currency into account. So the actual annual yield you can expect from your winnings is the interest rate minus the rate of inflation. Do the math and check if this is enough to fund your lifestyle.



          Option 2: Consume the pile of money, live good, die poor, and leave nothing to your heirs



          Instead of hoarding all the money, you slowly spend it over the course of your life in a way that you don't run out until you die. In order to calculate if it is enough money to do that, consider the following:



          • How much money do you need per month to maintain your current lifestyle?

          • How much will that cost increase due to inflation in the future?

          • How long do you expect to live?

          • How much additional money will you get out of any pension plans you are already entitled to?

          Do the math and estimate if your money is actually enough to finance your lifestyle until you die. You might be surprised how expensive it actually is to live for several decades. There is also one big unknown variable in this calculation: Unless you are already suffering from a leathal health issue, you will likely have no idea how long you are going to live. There are people who live a very unhealthy lifestyle, and yet live beyond 100.



          Option 3: Start your own company



          If you already had a great business idea and all you lacked was the starting capital to realize it, then this might be your chance. A few words of warning, though:



          • If you planned to live the rest of your life in idle luxury, then this path is pretty much the exact opposite. Being the boss of your own company is not as easy as you might think. If you start your own business, you will likely spend more time working than you ever did before. You will also have a lot more stress. If your company isn't profitable, then you suffer the financial consequences. If your company breaks any laws, then you might even face the legal consequences personally. And there are really a lot of laws companies needs to follow.

          • Make sure you actually know what you are doing. The majority of new companies don't survive longer than a few years before they go bankrupt. If you jump head over heels into an industry you know nothing about, you are going to fail badly. Ideally you would start a company in the same industry where you were already working before so you can use your experience. But even then it will pay off if you do your homework and educate yourself about what it means to own, manage and lead a company.





          share|improve this answer




















          • 2





            Regarding option 3 "If you want to be a Millionaire, start with a billion dollars and launch a new airline." Lots of people who came into money (lottery winners, athletes, etc) have tried to start businesses and lost their money.

            – stannius
            7 hours ago












          • @stannius I think that's covered by the second bullet under option 3

            – user73687
            6 hours ago














          8












          8








          8







          When you ever get suprised by a large sum of money, then do not immediately quit your job and do not immediately spend it on the first thing that comes to mind.



          Pay the tax on your winnings



          Before you start planning what to do with your winnings, make sure you know how much of it you are actually going to see. In many jurisdictions you need to pay quite a large percentage of tax on any lottery winnings. You really do not want to spend all your money and then get hit by a huge tax bill a year later which you can't pay.



          Pay off any debts.



          The first thing you should do with any large windfall is pay off any open debts you still have. There is rarely a reason to have debt if you have cash in hand. The only reason to not pay off a debt is if that debt contract comes with a penalty for paying it off early. But even that might be worth it if the interest is high enough. Do the math!



          Reduce your fixcosts



          Another thing you might consider in the same vein is if there is anything else you can do to reduce your fixcosts in the long run. If there is anything you are renting or leasing, consider if it would be cheaper in the long run to buy that thing (house and car are the prime candidates for this). But keep in mind that the thing might not live forever and might incur fixcosts in its own over time for maintenance.



          For example, if you buy a huge mansion, you also need to pay for maintaining a huge mansion (tax, insurance, heating, repairs...). There is one case of a guy in Germany who owned this cute little house. He ended up selling it to the government for one symbolic euro. Why would he do that? Because he ran out of money to maintain it.



          If you still have money left, let's consider the real question:



          Can you quit your job?



          Your money might look like a lot, but is it really enough to pay for your lifestyle until you are dead?



          There are basically three options you might or might not be able to afford.



          Option 1: Live off of interest, die rich and leave everything to your heirs.



          Invest your money in a smart but secure way and finance your lifestyle with the interest. Keep in mind that any investment which promises a more than slightly higher return than the central bank interest rate in your country will have some form of risk or additional work on your behalf involved. Any investment which promises a lot more is usually too good to be true. Also remember to take the rate of inflation of your local currency into account. So the actual annual yield you can expect from your winnings is the interest rate minus the rate of inflation. Do the math and check if this is enough to fund your lifestyle.



          Option 2: Consume the pile of money, live good, die poor, and leave nothing to your heirs



          Instead of hoarding all the money, you slowly spend it over the course of your life in a way that you don't run out until you die. In order to calculate if it is enough money to do that, consider the following:



          • How much money do you need per month to maintain your current lifestyle?

          • How much will that cost increase due to inflation in the future?

          • How long do you expect to live?

          • How much additional money will you get out of any pension plans you are already entitled to?

          Do the math and estimate if your money is actually enough to finance your lifestyle until you die. You might be surprised how expensive it actually is to live for several decades. There is also one big unknown variable in this calculation: Unless you are already suffering from a leathal health issue, you will likely have no idea how long you are going to live. There are people who live a very unhealthy lifestyle, and yet live beyond 100.



          Option 3: Start your own company



          If you already had a great business idea and all you lacked was the starting capital to realize it, then this might be your chance. A few words of warning, though:



          • If you planned to live the rest of your life in idle luxury, then this path is pretty much the exact opposite. Being the boss of your own company is not as easy as you might think. If you start your own business, you will likely spend more time working than you ever did before. You will also have a lot more stress. If your company isn't profitable, then you suffer the financial consequences. If your company breaks any laws, then you might even face the legal consequences personally. And there are really a lot of laws companies needs to follow.

          • Make sure you actually know what you are doing. The majority of new companies don't survive longer than a few years before they go bankrupt. If you jump head over heels into an industry you know nothing about, you are going to fail badly. Ideally you would start a company in the same industry where you were already working before so you can use your experience. But even then it will pay off if you do your homework and educate yourself about what it means to own, manage and lead a company.





          share|improve this answer















          When you ever get suprised by a large sum of money, then do not immediately quit your job and do not immediately spend it on the first thing that comes to mind.



          Pay the tax on your winnings



          Before you start planning what to do with your winnings, make sure you know how much of it you are actually going to see. In many jurisdictions you need to pay quite a large percentage of tax on any lottery winnings. You really do not want to spend all your money and then get hit by a huge tax bill a year later which you can't pay.



          Pay off any debts.



          The first thing you should do with any large windfall is pay off any open debts you still have. There is rarely a reason to have debt if you have cash in hand. The only reason to not pay off a debt is if that debt contract comes with a penalty for paying it off early. But even that might be worth it if the interest is high enough. Do the math!



          Reduce your fixcosts



          Another thing you might consider in the same vein is if there is anything else you can do to reduce your fixcosts in the long run. If there is anything you are renting or leasing, consider if it would be cheaper in the long run to buy that thing (house and car are the prime candidates for this). But keep in mind that the thing might not live forever and might incur fixcosts in its own over time for maintenance.



          For example, if you buy a huge mansion, you also need to pay for maintaining a huge mansion (tax, insurance, heating, repairs...). There is one case of a guy in Germany who owned this cute little house. He ended up selling it to the government for one symbolic euro. Why would he do that? Because he ran out of money to maintain it.



          If you still have money left, let's consider the real question:



          Can you quit your job?



          Your money might look like a lot, but is it really enough to pay for your lifestyle until you are dead?



          There are basically three options you might or might not be able to afford.



          Option 1: Live off of interest, die rich and leave everything to your heirs.



          Invest your money in a smart but secure way and finance your lifestyle with the interest. Keep in mind that any investment which promises a more than slightly higher return than the central bank interest rate in your country will have some form of risk or additional work on your behalf involved. Any investment which promises a lot more is usually too good to be true. Also remember to take the rate of inflation of your local currency into account. So the actual annual yield you can expect from your winnings is the interest rate minus the rate of inflation. Do the math and check if this is enough to fund your lifestyle.



          Option 2: Consume the pile of money, live good, die poor, and leave nothing to your heirs



          Instead of hoarding all the money, you slowly spend it over the course of your life in a way that you don't run out until you die. In order to calculate if it is enough money to do that, consider the following:



          • How much money do you need per month to maintain your current lifestyle?

          • How much will that cost increase due to inflation in the future?

          • How long do you expect to live?

          • How much additional money will you get out of any pension plans you are already entitled to?

          Do the math and estimate if your money is actually enough to finance your lifestyle until you die. You might be surprised how expensive it actually is to live for several decades. There is also one big unknown variable in this calculation: Unless you are already suffering from a leathal health issue, you will likely have no idea how long you are going to live. There are people who live a very unhealthy lifestyle, and yet live beyond 100.



          Option 3: Start your own company



          If you already had a great business idea and all you lacked was the starting capital to realize it, then this might be your chance. A few words of warning, though:



          • If you planned to live the rest of your life in idle luxury, then this path is pretty much the exact opposite. Being the boss of your own company is not as easy as you might think. If you start your own business, you will likely spend more time working than you ever did before. You will also have a lot more stress. If your company isn't profitable, then you suffer the financial consequences. If your company breaks any laws, then you might even face the legal consequences personally. And there are really a lot of laws companies needs to follow.

          • Make sure you actually know what you are doing. The majority of new companies don't survive longer than a few years before they go bankrupt. If you jump head over heels into an industry you know nothing about, you are going to fail badly. Ideally you would start a company in the same industry where you were already working before so you can use your experience. But even then it will pay off if you do your homework and educate yourself about what it means to own, manage and lead a company.






          share|improve this answer














          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer








          edited 13 hours ago

























          answered 13 hours ago









          PhilippPhilipp

          6,77021525




          6,77021525







          • 2





            Regarding option 3 "If you want to be a Millionaire, start with a billion dollars and launch a new airline." Lots of people who came into money (lottery winners, athletes, etc) have tried to start businesses and lost their money.

            – stannius
            7 hours ago












          • @stannius I think that's covered by the second bullet under option 3

            – user73687
            6 hours ago













          • 2





            Regarding option 3 "If you want to be a Millionaire, start with a billion dollars and launch a new airline." Lots of people who came into money (lottery winners, athletes, etc) have tried to start businesses and lost their money.

            – stannius
            7 hours ago












          • @stannius I think that's covered by the second bullet under option 3

            – user73687
            6 hours ago








          2




          2





          Regarding option 3 "If you want to be a Millionaire, start with a billion dollars and launch a new airline." Lots of people who came into money (lottery winners, athletes, etc) have tried to start businesses and lost their money.

          – stannius
          7 hours ago






          Regarding option 3 "If you want to be a Millionaire, start with a billion dollars and launch a new airline." Lots of people who came into money (lottery winners, athletes, etc) have tried to start businesses and lost their money.

          – stannius
          7 hours ago














          @stannius I think that's covered by the second bullet under option 3

          – user73687
          6 hours ago






          @stannius I think that's covered by the second bullet under option 3

          – user73687
          6 hours ago












          3














          For most people this deserves the answer of "Index fund".



          Take first payment, go to local bank, ask to open index fund mutual account. Put it all in. Don't retire just yet. Don't tell anybody else you have it.



          Second payment, put most of it in. Don't upgrade your lifestyle.



          Third payment, put most of it in.



          The general idea is to put away a good fraction on what is coming. Eventually you'll want to live off the rest of it and not work anymore. The higher standard of living you want, the later this is.



          When the lottery annuity runs out, you want to be able to live on the investment income alone. The investment income of two million on the index fund is comfortable.






          share|improve this answer


















          • 2





            Don't go to local bank, go online to one (or several) of the mutual fund companies such as Vanguard or T. Rowe Price. And do a bit of diversification: a US index fund, a international fund, maybe a percentage in bonds.

            – jamesqf
            11 hours ago






          • 2





            @jamesqf: There is nothing wrong with your advice; I wrote something so simple that any Joe could do it on purpose.

            – Joshua
            11 hours ago











          • Would it be more profitable to take the annuity and invest monthly or to take the lump sum and invest it all at once? Theoretically, that is, assuming you aren't going to spend any of it

            – Kai
            3 hours ago












          • @Kai: Depends on the percent loss for the lump sum.

            – Joshua
            2 hours ago















          3














          For most people this deserves the answer of "Index fund".



          Take first payment, go to local bank, ask to open index fund mutual account. Put it all in. Don't retire just yet. Don't tell anybody else you have it.



          Second payment, put most of it in. Don't upgrade your lifestyle.



          Third payment, put most of it in.



          The general idea is to put away a good fraction on what is coming. Eventually you'll want to live off the rest of it and not work anymore. The higher standard of living you want, the later this is.



          When the lottery annuity runs out, you want to be able to live on the investment income alone. The investment income of two million on the index fund is comfortable.






          share|improve this answer


















          • 2





            Don't go to local bank, go online to one (or several) of the mutual fund companies such as Vanguard or T. Rowe Price. And do a bit of diversification: a US index fund, a international fund, maybe a percentage in bonds.

            – jamesqf
            11 hours ago






          • 2





            @jamesqf: There is nothing wrong with your advice; I wrote something so simple that any Joe could do it on purpose.

            – Joshua
            11 hours ago











          • Would it be more profitable to take the annuity and invest monthly or to take the lump sum and invest it all at once? Theoretically, that is, assuming you aren't going to spend any of it

            – Kai
            3 hours ago












          • @Kai: Depends on the percent loss for the lump sum.

            – Joshua
            2 hours ago













          3












          3








          3







          For most people this deserves the answer of "Index fund".



          Take first payment, go to local bank, ask to open index fund mutual account. Put it all in. Don't retire just yet. Don't tell anybody else you have it.



          Second payment, put most of it in. Don't upgrade your lifestyle.



          Third payment, put most of it in.



          The general idea is to put away a good fraction on what is coming. Eventually you'll want to live off the rest of it and not work anymore. The higher standard of living you want, the later this is.



          When the lottery annuity runs out, you want to be able to live on the investment income alone. The investment income of two million on the index fund is comfortable.






          share|improve this answer













          For most people this deserves the answer of "Index fund".



          Take first payment, go to local bank, ask to open index fund mutual account. Put it all in. Don't retire just yet. Don't tell anybody else you have it.



          Second payment, put most of it in. Don't upgrade your lifestyle.



          Third payment, put most of it in.



          The general idea is to put away a good fraction on what is coming. Eventually you'll want to live off the rest of it and not work anymore. The higher standard of living you want, the later this is.



          When the lottery annuity runs out, you want to be able to live on the investment income alone. The investment income of two million on the index fund is comfortable.







          share|improve this answer












          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer










          answered 12 hours ago









          JoshuaJoshua

          543311




          543311







          • 2





            Don't go to local bank, go online to one (or several) of the mutual fund companies such as Vanguard or T. Rowe Price. And do a bit of diversification: a US index fund, a international fund, maybe a percentage in bonds.

            – jamesqf
            11 hours ago






          • 2





            @jamesqf: There is nothing wrong with your advice; I wrote something so simple that any Joe could do it on purpose.

            – Joshua
            11 hours ago











          • Would it be more profitable to take the annuity and invest monthly or to take the lump sum and invest it all at once? Theoretically, that is, assuming you aren't going to spend any of it

            – Kai
            3 hours ago












          • @Kai: Depends on the percent loss for the lump sum.

            – Joshua
            2 hours ago












          • 2





            Don't go to local bank, go online to one (or several) of the mutual fund companies such as Vanguard or T. Rowe Price. And do a bit of diversification: a US index fund, a international fund, maybe a percentage in bonds.

            – jamesqf
            11 hours ago






          • 2





            @jamesqf: There is nothing wrong with your advice; I wrote something so simple that any Joe could do it on purpose.

            – Joshua
            11 hours ago











          • Would it be more profitable to take the annuity and invest monthly or to take the lump sum and invest it all at once? Theoretically, that is, assuming you aren't going to spend any of it

            – Kai
            3 hours ago












          • @Kai: Depends on the percent loss for the lump sum.

            – Joshua
            2 hours ago







          2




          2





          Don't go to local bank, go online to one (or several) of the mutual fund companies such as Vanguard or T. Rowe Price. And do a bit of diversification: a US index fund, a international fund, maybe a percentage in bonds.

          – jamesqf
          11 hours ago





          Don't go to local bank, go online to one (or several) of the mutual fund companies such as Vanguard or T. Rowe Price. And do a bit of diversification: a US index fund, a international fund, maybe a percentage in bonds.

          – jamesqf
          11 hours ago




          2




          2





          @jamesqf: There is nothing wrong with your advice; I wrote something so simple that any Joe could do it on purpose.

          – Joshua
          11 hours ago





          @jamesqf: There is nothing wrong with your advice; I wrote something so simple that any Joe could do it on purpose.

          – Joshua
          11 hours ago













          Would it be more profitable to take the annuity and invest monthly or to take the lump sum and invest it all at once? Theoretically, that is, assuming you aren't going to spend any of it

          – Kai
          3 hours ago






          Would it be more profitable to take the annuity and invest monthly or to take the lump sum and invest it all at once? Theoretically, that is, assuming you aren't going to spend any of it

          – Kai
          3 hours ago














          @Kai: Depends on the percent loss for the lump sum.

          – Joshua
          2 hours ago





          @Kai: Depends on the percent loss for the lump sum.

          – Joshua
          2 hours ago











          2














          Talk to a lawyer who specializes in family trusts and establishing family charitable foundations for "high net-worth individuals". Do this before you sign the lottery ticket.



          If you were planning to "do good for the world", you will be able to do a lot more good if you can manage to put the lottery ticket in a tax-advantaged form before cashing it in.






          share|improve this answer



























            2














            Talk to a lawyer who specializes in family trusts and establishing family charitable foundations for "high net-worth individuals". Do this before you sign the lottery ticket.



            If you were planning to "do good for the world", you will be able to do a lot more good if you can manage to put the lottery ticket in a tax-advantaged form before cashing it in.






            share|improve this answer

























              2












              2








              2







              Talk to a lawyer who specializes in family trusts and establishing family charitable foundations for "high net-worth individuals". Do this before you sign the lottery ticket.



              If you were planning to "do good for the world", you will be able to do a lot more good if you can manage to put the lottery ticket in a tax-advantaged form before cashing it in.






              share|improve this answer













              Talk to a lawyer who specializes in family trusts and establishing family charitable foundations for "high net-worth individuals". Do this before you sign the lottery ticket.



              If you were planning to "do good for the world", you will be able to do a lot more good if you can manage to put the lottery ticket in a tax-advantaged form before cashing it in.







              share|improve this answer












              share|improve this answer



              share|improve this answer










              answered 11 hours ago









              JasperJasper

              3,111923




              3,111923





















                  2














                  Some causes I can imagine:



                  • you

                  • you

                  • you

                  • you

                  The simple fact is, God doesn't make you do stupid things with money.



                  Anyway, you're on the right track: you know the threat is there, you're asking the question.



                  It's all about financial education and beliefs



                  There's a grand unification issue at hand, and it's not strategies to dodge "this money-sink", or "that money-sink". The key issue is financial education. Understanding what money is and can do for you. Yeah, yeah, everyone thinks they know the answer to that, "it can buy me blackjack and hookers" -- and that's the problem. Everyone has an incomplete answer, and so they don't see the other, much more lucrative options available to those with a fuller education.



                  This is literally the difference between the rich and the poor. The rich believe money attracts more money; the poor believe money is something that only leaves their hands. That is political, even religious to each of them; they carefully collect evidence that confirms their preconceived notions and reject evidence that does not.



                  For instance, when Wall Street tanks, the poor declare they've taken a horrible loss, and sell off their stocks, consider this an important life-lesson, and swear to never buy stocks again. All of that jibes with their core beliefs about money, so it makes perfect sense to them. The rich take an even worse hit. But their attitude is "Oh look, Wall Street is having a half-off sale!" and they buy all the additional stocks they can. Later, of course, the market recovers. The poor sold low, locking in their losses; they are left behind and their fears are fulfilled. "See, I was right!" Meanwhile the rich see their losses recover, and they bought even more, so they make out like bandits. "See, I was right!"



                  All those paragraphs to say, your biggest enemy is your existing, entrenched, self-beliefs about money. I don't care who you are. They are wrong. Because they're incomplete. For best success, get rid of 'em.



                  It's a big world out there



                  Universities also have lottery winnings. Some very rich alumnus dies, and leaves them $50 million in an endowment. This actually is so common that there is very strict law about what must be done. The law (which literally has "Prudent" in its name) requires aggressive investment of the money to assure growth. That fried every brain cell I had about money, when I became someone responsible for a $8 million endowment. Everything I knew about money is wrong.



                  An endowment is "forever income". The money (the capital, or corpus) is invested, and only a small amount (3-7% a year) is drawn off. This funds programs, faculty members, etc. All the other investment gains are folded back into the endowment to ensure it grows against inflation. I never realized investments could generate meangful income forever, I always thought investments would eventually be used up.



                  So, right off the bat. The first $2 million of your lottery winnings, you slap them in an "endowment-like thing" and draw them down at a conservative 4%. This will give you $80,000 a year and still leave room for the "endowment" to grow, so the $80,000 will also grow with inflation. That funds your basic needs. (Also it's taxed as long-term capital gains, at about half normal tax rates).



                  If you wanted to go kowabunga, make it $5 million and $200,000/year. If you can't make your life work on $200k/year, good grief!



                  Anyway, with your basic life needs covered, now you can consider the rest of it more investable. Right off the bat you could just throw it in the same account and draw it down at 4-6% a year, assuring a handsome salary for life.



                  By the way, common mistake here. Don't dissociate yourself from your money and think of it as "not you", "mystery money", "not really yours" or "junk/mad money". And because of that, people don't respect the money, and mistreat (waste) it. Before they realize it, they are mistreating/wasting all money, and that is the road to perdition. It is your money. You paid taxes on it. Make it part of your personal identity.



                  And if your ethics say "I cannot be wealthy or have airs or superiority over others", boy have I got an option for you, at the end.



                  Anyway, you could just go off and buy a yacht (hole in the water you pour money into), but always think in terms of endowments. How will I maintain the yacht? If it cost $300,000 a year to keep up, multply that by 25 and put $7.5 million in an internal endowment for the yacht's upkeep. Suddenly you realize that $2 million yacht will tie up $9.5 million of your capital, it's a different decision, eh?



                  But I don't recommend too many things that are a money sink. I recommend you focus on things which have a fair chance of doing well.



                  • Social investing. Doing the endowment thing, but investing in companies which correspond to your beliefs. This won't do as well as index funds, and the 'management costs' (picking good stocks) will be much higher.


                  • Real estate. Normally endowments are skittish of real estate investing because it's "high maintenance" and often doesn't do as well as pure market investments. But if you want to get into it, especially if you have sweat-equity to put into it, and your local market is favorable, then rental properties may be a good investment for you. Always treat it as your business that is expected to make money on its own and measure it against any other investment.


                  • Small business. However this is a trap for lottery-winner types; they often find themselves making emotional investments in loser businesses that no sane venture capitalist would touch: they aren't heroes, they're suckers. Be a minority investor along with real sharks, and managers who have invested their life savings (have "skin in the game"). And have competent legal counsel involved and listen to them.


                  • Your own business. But again, swim with the sharks: seek to involve independent VC. If the VC says "ain't touching it with a 10 foot pole" then you have a loser business. If they say "I want more share for my money", you might have a winner, but get good help making it work.


                  Charity



                  The trick with charitable contributions is that you really need to plan it even before you sign the lottery ticket. Because that lottery ticket will be taxed at nearly 50% (Federal and state), and you want to shield as much of that income as possible from taxation.



                  So this is where you need to build a legal team (don't worry, they'll work on a "we'll bill you" basis) and strategize the best way to turn the unsigned lottery ticket into the maximum charitable contribution for the minimum possible taxes, as well as figure out all the tax angles. For instance you might form a nonprofit, then form a partnership which owns the lottery ticket; thus you and your nonprofit split the winnings and the nonprofit's share is never taxed in the first place. This is peculiar to state laws.



                  Anyway, you then have a nonprofit that controls a considerable nest-egg. You know what to do! Straight into an endowment with it! Then this nonprofit can give donations to other nonprofits pretty much as you direct. This can be done in several forms: A private foundation, or a simpler-for-you donor-advised fund for instance.



                  Another thing that can happen, but only with careful tax-law management: you can enter the employ of an existing nonprofit, and use your directable charity money to support them. You pay normal taxes on your salary. This method is very widely abused, so there are significant limits on the method; to start with, your salary has to be market competitive.






                  share|improve this answer





























                    2














                    Some causes I can imagine:



                    • you

                    • you

                    • you

                    • you

                    The simple fact is, God doesn't make you do stupid things with money.



                    Anyway, you're on the right track: you know the threat is there, you're asking the question.



                    It's all about financial education and beliefs



                    There's a grand unification issue at hand, and it's not strategies to dodge "this money-sink", or "that money-sink". The key issue is financial education. Understanding what money is and can do for you. Yeah, yeah, everyone thinks they know the answer to that, "it can buy me blackjack and hookers" -- and that's the problem. Everyone has an incomplete answer, and so they don't see the other, much more lucrative options available to those with a fuller education.



                    This is literally the difference between the rich and the poor. The rich believe money attracts more money; the poor believe money is something that only leaves their hands. That is political, even religious to each of them; they carefully collect evidence that confirms their preconceived notions and reject evidence that does not.



                    For instance, when Wall Street tanks, the poor declare they've taken a horrible loss, and sell off their stocks, consider this an important life-lesson, and swear to never buy stocks again. All of that jibes with their core beliefs about money, so it makes perfect sense to them. The rich take an even worse hit. But their attitude is "Oh look, Wall Street is having a half-off sale!" and they buy all the additional stocks they can. Later, of course, the market recovers. The poor sold low, locking in their losses; they are left behind and their fears are fulfilled. "See, I was right!" Meanwhile the rich see their losses recover, and they bought even more, so they make out like bandits. "See, I was right!"



                    All those paragraphs to say, your biggest enemy is your existing, entrenched, self-beliefs about money. I don't care who you are. They are wrong. Because they're incomplete. For best success, get rid of 'em.



                    It's a big world out there



                    Universities also have lottery winnings. Some very rich alumnus dies, and leaves them $50 million in an endowment. This actually is so common that there is very strict law about what must be done. The law (which literally has "Prudent" in its name) requires aggressive investment of the money to assure growth. That fried every brain cell I had about money, when I became someone responsible for a $8 million endowment. Everything I knew about money is wrong.



                    An endowment is "forever income". The money (the capital, or corpus) is invested, and only a small amount (3-7% a year) is drawn off. This funds programs, faculty members, etc. All the other investment gains are folded back into the endowment to ensure it grows against inflation. I never realized investments could generate meangful income forever, I always thought investments would eventually be used up.



                    So, right off the bat. The first $2 million of your lottery winnings, you slap them in an "endowment-like thing" and draw them down at a conservative 4%. This will give you $80,000 a year and still leave room for the "endowment" to grow, so the $80,000 will also grow with inflation. That funds your basic needs. (Also it's taxed as long-term capital gains, at about half normal tax rates).



                    If you wanted to go kowabunga, make it $5 million and $200,000/year. If you can't make your life work on $200k/year, good grief!



                    Anyway, with your basic life needs covered, now you can consider the rest of it more investable. Right off the bat you could just throw it in the same account and draw it down at 4-6% a year, assuring a handsome salary for life.



                    By the way, common mistake here. Don't dissociate yourself from your money and think of it as "not you", "mystery money", "not really yours" or "junk/mad money". And because of that, people don't respect the money, and mistreat (waste) it. Before they realize it, they are mistreating/wasting all money, and that is the road to perdition. It is your money. You paid taxes on it. Make it part of your personal identity.



                    And if your ethics say "I cannot be wealthy or have airs or superiority over others", boy have I got an option for you, at the end.



                    Anyway, you could just go off and buy a yacht (hole in the water you pour money into), but always think in terms of endowments. How will I maintain the yacht? If it cost $300,000 a year to keep up, multply that by 25 and put $7.5 million in an internal endowment for the yacht's upkeep. Suddenly you realize that $2 million yacht will tie up $9.5 million of your capital, it's a different decision, eh?



                    But I don't recommend too many things that are a money sink. I recommend you focus on things which have a fair chance of doing well.



                    • Social investing. Doing the endowment thing, but investing in companies which correspond to your beliefs. This won't do as well as index funds, and the 'management costs' (picking good stocks) will be much higher.


                    • Real estate. Normally endowments are skittish of real estate investing because it's "high maintenance" and often doesn't do as well as pure market investments. But if you want to get into it, especially if you have sweat-equity to put into it, and your local market is favorable, then rental properties may be a good investment for you. Always treat it as your business that is expected to make money on its own and measure it against any other investment.


                    • Small business. However this is a trap for lottery-winner types; they often find themselves making emotional investments in loser businesses that no sane venture capitalist would touch: they aren't heroes, they're suckers. Be a minority investor along with real sharks, and managers who have invested their life savings (have "skin in the game"). And have competent legal counsel involved and listen to them.


                    • Your own business. But again, swim with the sharks: seek to involve independent VC. If the VC says "ain't touching it with a 10 foot pole" then you have a loser business. If they say "I want more share for my money", you might have a winner, but get good help making it work.


                    Charity



                    The trick with charitable contributions is that you really need to plan it even before you sign the lottery ticket. Because that lottery ticket will be taxed at nearly 50% (Federal and state), and you want to shield as much of that income as possible from taxation.



                    So this is where you need to build a legal team (don't worry, they'll work on a "we'll bill you" basis) and strategize the best way to turn the unsigned lottery ticket into the maximum charitable contribution for the minimum possible taxes, as well as figure out all the tax angles. For instance you might form a nonprofit, then form a partnership which owns the lottery ticket; thus you and your nonprofit split the winnings and the nonprofit's share is never taxed in the first place. This is peculiar to state laws.



                    Anyway, you then have a nonprofit that controls a considerable nest-egg. You know what to do! Straight into an endowment with it! Then this nonprofit can give donations to other nonprofits pretty much as you direct. This can be done in several forms: A private foundation, or a simpler-for-you donor-advised fund for instance.



                    Another thing that can happen, but only with careful tax-law management: you can enter the employ of an existing nonprofit, and use your directable charity money to support them. You pay normal taxes on your salary. This method is very widely abused, so there are significant limits on the method; to start with, your salary has to be market competitive.






                    share|improve this answer



























                      2












                      2








                      2







                      Some causes I can imagine:



                      • you

                      • you

                      • you

                      • you

                      The simple fact is, God doesn't make you do stupid things with money.



                      Anyway, you're on the right track: you know the threat is there, you're asking the question.



                      It's all about financial education and beliefs



                      There's a grand unification issue at hand, and it's not strategies to dodge "this money-sink", or "that money-sink". The key issue is financial education. Understanding what money is and can do for you. Yeah, yeah, everyone thinks they know the answer to that, "it can buy me blackjack and hookers" -- and that's the problem. Everyone has an incomplete answer, and so they don't see the other, much more lucrative options available to those with a fuller education.



                      This is literally the difference between the rich and the poor. The rich believe money attracts more money; the poor believe money is something that only leaves their hands. That is political, even religious to each of them; they carefully collect evidence that confirms their preconceived notions and reject evidence that does not.



                      For instance, when Wall Street tanks, the poor declare they've taken a horrible loss, and sell off their stocks, consider this an important life-lesson, and swear to never buy stocks again. All of that jibes with their core beliefs about money, so it makes perfect sense to them. The rich take an even worse hit. But their attitude is "Oh look, Wall Street is having a half-off sale!" and they buy all the additional stocks they can. Later, of course, the market recovers. The poor sold low, locking in their losses; they are left behind and their fears are fulfilled. "See, I was right!" Meanwhile the rich see their losses recover, and they bought even more, so they make out like bandits. "See, I was right!"



                      All those paragraphs to say, your biggest enemy is your existing, entrenched, self-beliefs about money. I don't care who you are. They are wrong. Because they're incomplete. For best success, get rid of 'em.



                      It's a big world out there



                      Universities also have lottery winnings. Some very rich alumnus dies, and leaves them $50 million in an endowment. This actually is so common that there is very strict law about what must be done. The law (which literally has "Prudent" in its name) requires aggressive investment of the money to assure growth. That fried every brain cell I had about money, when I became someone responsible for a $8 million endowment. Everything I knew about money is wrong.



                      An endowment is "forever income". The money (the capital, or corpus) is invested, and only a small amount (3-7% a year) is drawn off. This funds programs, faculty members, etc. All the other investment gains are folded back into the endowment to ensure it grows against inflation. I never realized investments could generate meangful income forever, I always thought investments would eventually be used up.



                      So, right off the bat. The first $2 million of your lottery winnings, you slap them in an "endowment-like thing" and draw them down at a conservative 4%. This will give you $80,000 a year and still leave room for the "endowment" to grow, so the $80,000 will also grow with inflation. That funds your basic needs. (Also it's taxed as long-term capital gains, at about half normal tax rates).



                      If you wanted to go kowabunga, make it $5 million and $200,000/year. If you can't make your life work on $200k/year, good grief!



                      Anyway, with your basic life needs covered, now you can consider the rest of it more investable. Right off the bat you could just throw it in the same account and draw it down at 4-6% a year, assuring a handsome salary for life.



                      By the way, common mistake here. Don't dissociate yourself from your money and think of it as "not you", "mystery money", "not really yours" or "junk/mad money". And because of that, people don't respect the money, and mistreat (waste) it. Before they realize it, they are mistreating/wasting all money, and that is the road to perdition. It is your money. You paid taxes on it. Make it part of your personal identity.



                      And if your ethics say "I cannot be wealthy or have airs or superiority over others", boy have I got an option for you, at the end.



                      Anyway, you could just go off and buy a yacht (hole in the water you pour money into), but always think in terms of endowments. How will I maintain the yacht? If it cost $300,000 a year to keep up, multply that by 25 and put $7.5 million in an internal endowment for the yacht's upkeep. Suddenly you realize that $2 million yacht will tie up $9.5 million of your capital, it's a different decision, eh?



                      But I don't recommend too many things that are a money sink. I recommend you focus on things which have a fair chance of doing well.



                      • Social investing. Doing the endowment thing, but investing in companies which correspond to your beliefs. This won't do as well as index funds, and the 'management costs' (picking good stocks) will be much higher.


                      • Real estate. Normally endowments are skittish of real estate investing because it's "high maintenance" and often doesn't do as well as pure market investments. But if you want to get into it, especially if you have sweat-equity to put into it, and your local market is favorable, then rental properties may be a good investment for you. Always treat it as your business that is expected to make money on its own and measure it against any other investment.


                      • Small business. However this is a trap for lottery-winner types; they often find themselves making emotional investments in loser businesses that no sane venture capitalist would touch: they aren't heroes, they're suckers. Be a minority investor along with real sharks, and managers who have invested their life savings (have "skin in the game"). And have competent legal counsel involved and listen to them.


                      • Your own business. But again, swim with the sharks: seek to involve independent VC. If the VC says "ain't touching it with a 10 foot pole" then you have a loser business. If they say "I want more share for my money", you might have a winner, but get good help making it work.


                      Charity



                      The trick with charitable contributions is that you really need to plan it even before you sign the lottery ticket. Because that lottery ticket will be taxed at nearly 50% (Federal and state), and you want to shield as much of that income as possible from taxation.



                      So this is where you need to build a legal team (don't worry, they'll work on a "we'll bill you" basis) and strategize the best way to turn the unsigned lottery ticket into the maximum charitable contribution for the minimum possible taxes, as well as figure out all the tax angles. For instance you might form a nonprofit, then form a partnership which owns the lottery ticket; thus you and your nonprofit split the winnings and the nonprofit's share is never taxed in the first place. This is peculiar to state laws.



                      Anyway, you then have a nonprofit that controls a considerable nest-egg. You know what to do! Straight into an endowment with it! Then this nonprofit can give donations to other nonprofits pretty much as you direct. This can be done in several forms: A private foundation, or a simpler-for-you donor-advised fund for instance.



                      Another thing that can happen, but only with careful tax-law management: you can enter the employ of an existing nonprofit, and use your directable charity money to support them. You pay normal taxes on your salary. This method is very widely abused, so there are significant limits on the method; to start with, your salary has to be market competitive.






                      share|improve this answer















                      Some causes I can imagine:



                      • you

                      • you

                      • you

                      • you

                      The simple fact is, God doesn't make you do stupid things with money.



                      Anyway, you're on the right track: you know the threat is there, you're asking the question.



                      It's all about financial education and beliefs



                      There's a grand unification issue at hand, and it's not strategies to dodge "this money-sink", or "that money-sink". The key issue is financial education. Understanding what money is and can do for you. Yeah, yeah, everyone thinks they know the answer to that, "it can buy me blackjack and hookers" -- and that's the problem. Everyone has an incomplete answer, and so they don't see the other, much more lucrative options available to those with a fuller education.



                      This is literally the difference between the rich and the poor. The rich believe money attracts more money; the poor believe money is something that only leaves their hands. That is political, even religious to each of them; they carefully collect evidence that confirms their preconceived notions and reject evidence that does not.



                      For instance, when Wall Street tanks, the poor declare they've taken a horrible loss, and sell off their stocks, consider this an important life-lesson, and swear to never buy stocks again. All of that jibes with their core beliefs about money, so it makes perfect sense to them. The rich take an even worse hit. But their attitude is "Oh look, Wall Street is having a half-off sale!" and they buy all the additional stocks they can. Later, of course, the market recovers. The poor sold low, locking in their losses; they are left behind and their fears are fulfilled. "See, I was right!" Meanwhile the rich see their losses recover, and they bought even more, so they make out like bandits. "See, I was right!"



                      All those paragraphs to say, your biggest enemy is your existing, entrenched, self-beliefs about money. I don't care who you are. They are wrong. Because they're incomplete. For best success, get rid of 'em.



                      It's a big world out there



                      Universities also have lottery winnings. Some very rich alumnus dies, and leaves them $50 million in an endowment. This actually is so common that there is very strict law about what must be done. The law (which literally has "Prudent" in its name) requires aggressive investment of the money to assure growth. That fried every brain cell I had about money, when I became someone responsible for a $8 million endowment. Everything I knew about money is wrong.



                      An endowment is "forever income". The money (the capital, or corpus) is invested, and only a small amount (3-7% a year) is drawn off. This funds programs, faculty members, etc. All the other investment gains are folded back into the endowment to ensure it grows against inflation. I never realized investments could generate meangful income forever, I always thought investments would eventually be used up.



                      So, right off the bat. The first $2 million of your lottery winnings, you slap them in an "endowment-like thing" and draw them down at a conservative 4%. This will give you $80,000 a year and still leave room for the "endowment" to grow, so the $80,000 will also grow with inflation. That funds your basic needs. (Also it's taxed as long-term capital gains, at about half normal tax rates).



                      If you wanted to go kowabunga, make it $5 million and $200,000/year. If you can't make your life work on $200k/year, good grief!



                      Anyway, with your basic life needs covered, now you can consider the rest of it more investable. Right off the bat you could just throw it in the same account and draw it down at 4-6% a year, assuring a handsome salary for life.



                      By the way, common mistake here. Don't dissociate yourself from your money and think of it as "not you", "mystery money", "not really yours" or "junk/mad money". And because of that, people don't respect the money, and mistreat (waste) it. Before they realize it, they are mistreating/wasting all money, and that is the road to perdition. It is your money. You paid taxes on it. Make it part of your personal identity.



                      And if your ethics say "I cannot be wealthy or have airs or superiority over others", boy have I got an option for you, at the end.



                      Anyway, you could just go off and buy a yacht (hole in the water you pour money into), but always think in terms of endowments. How will I maintain the yacht? If it cost $300,000 a year to keep up, multply that by 25 and put $7.5 million in an internal endowment for the yacht's upkeep. Suddenly you realize that $2 million yacht will tie up $9.5 million of your capital, it's a different decision, eh?



                      But I don't recommend too many things that are a money sink. I recommend you focus on things which have a fair chance of doing well.



                      • Social investing. Doing the endowment thing, but investing in companies which correspond to your beliefs. This won't do as well as index funds, and the 'management costs' (picking good stocks) will be much higher.


                      • Real estate. Normally endowments are skittish of real estate investing because it's "high maintenance" and often doesn't do as well as pure market investments. But if you want to get into it, especially if you have sweat-equity to put into it, and your local market is favorable, then rental properties may be a good investment for you. Always treat it as your business that is expected to make money on its own and measure it against any other investment.


                      • Small business. However this is a trap for lottery-winner types; they often find themselves making emotional investments in loser businesses that no sane venture capitalist would touch: they aren't heroes, they're suckers. Be a minority investor along with real sharks, and managers who have invested their life savings (have "skin in the game"). And have competent legal counsel involved and listen to them.


                      • Your own business. But again, swim with the sharks: seek to involve independent VC. If the VC says "ain't touching it with a 10 foot pole" then you have a loser business. If they say "I want more share for my money", you might have a winner, but get good help making it work.


                      Charity



                      The trick with charitable contributions is that you really need to plan it even before you sign the lottery ticket. Because that lottery ticket will be taxed at nearly 50% (Federal and state), and you want to shield as much of that income as possible from taxation.



                      So this is where you need to build a legal team (don't worry, they'll work on a "we'll bill you" basis) and strategize the best way to turn the unsigned lottery ticket into the maximum charitable contribution for the minimum possible taxes, as well as figure out all the tax angles. For instance you might form a nonprofit, then form a partnership which owns the lottery ticket; thus you and your nonprofit split the winnings and the nonprofit's share is never taxed in the first place. This is peculiar to state laws.



                      Anyway, you then have a nonprofit that controls a considerable nest-egg. You know what to do! Straight into an endowment with it! Then this nonprofit can give donations to other nonprofits pretty much as you direct. This can be done in several forms: A private foundation, or a simpler-for-you donor-advised fund for instance.



                      Another thing that can happen, but only with careful tax-law management: you can enter the employ of an existing nonprofit, and use your directable charity money to support them. You pay normal taxes on your salary. This method is very widely abused, so there are significant limits on the method; to start with, your salary has to be market competitive.







                      share|improve this answer














                      share|improve this answer



                      share|improve this answer








                      edited 9 hours ago

























                      answered 11 hours ago









                      HarperHarper

                      24.5k63786




                      24.5k63786





















                          0














                          I seriously doubt that all, or even most lottery winners lose all their money within 1-2 years, but, whatever. You don't need to win the lottery to lose your money on casinos and hookers, poor investment choices, etc. Plenty of people accomplish that just fine without a massive windfall driving it.



                          Preparation is the key. I often joke about what I would do if I win the lottery, but to a certain extent, it's not really a joke. How often have you seen a lottery winner get interviewed, and when asked what they are going to do with the money, they say, "Oh my gosh, I don't know!" Sadly, they really don't know, which is maddening, because why would you buy a ticket without at least dreaming of winning?



                          Step #1: Have a plan. As ridiculous as it might be, I have a plan. Someday, when they interview me, I'll tell them exactly what I'm going to do with the money. I have a list of things that has been very consistent for years. When that day comes and I win, it's just a simple process of checking off my list. I might do some stupid things with the winnings, but I'll have done a lot of smart things too. Hopefully the smart will greatly outweigh the dumb.



                          Step #2: Handle your money wisely today. You don't need to win the lottery to have a financial advisor. If you have any money available for investing, you should have one. I have one I've worked with for 20 years. Should I win the lottery tomorrow, I've already got a trusted advisor in place.



                          Start preparing now for that big win. Even if it never happens, you will be much better off at least thinking about your money and planning your future. Hopefully you will start putting the pieces in place that will help you plan for that future with or without a massive windfall.






                          share|improve this answer



























                            0














                            I seriously doubt that all, or even most lottery winners lose all their money within 1-2 years, but, whatever. You don't need to win the lottery to lose your money on casinos and hookers, poor investment choices, etc. Plenty of people accomplish that just fine without a massive windfall driving it.



                            Preparation is the key. I often joke about what I would do if I win the lottery, but to a certain extent, it's not really a joke. How often have you seen a lottery winner get interviewed, and when asked what they are going to do with the money, they say, "Oh my gosh, I don't know!" Sadly, they really don't know, which is maddening, because why would you buy a ticket without at least dreaming of winning?



                            Step #1: Have a plan. As ridiculous as it might be, I have a plan. Someday, when they interview me, I'll tell them exactly what I'm going to do with the money. I have a list of things that has been very consistent for years. When that day comes and I win, it's just a simple process of checking off my list. I might do some stupid things with the winnings, but I'll have done a lot of smart things too. Hopefully the smart will greatly outweigh the dumb.



                            Step #2: Handle your money wisely today. You don't need to win the lottery to have a financial advisor. If you have any money available for investing, you should have one. I have one I've worked with for 20 years. Should I win the lottery tomorrow, I've already got a trusted advisor in place.



                            Start preparing now for that big win. Even if it never happens, you will be much better off at least thinking about your money and planning your future. Hopefully you will start putting the pieces in place that will help you plan for that future with or without a massive windfall.






                            share|improve this answer

























                              0












                              0








                              0







                              I seriously doubt that all, or even most lottery winners lose all their money within 1-2 years, but, whatever. You don't need to win the lottery to lose your money on casinos and hookers, poor investment choices, etc. Plenty of people accomplish that just fine without a massive windfall driving it.



                              Preparation is the key. I often joke about what I would do if I win the lottery, but to a certain extent, it's not really a joke. How often have you seen a lottery winner get interviewed, and when asked what they are going to do with the money, they say, "Oh my gosh, I don't know!" Sadly, they really don't know, which is maddening, because why would you buy a ticket without at least dreaming of winning?



                              Step #1: Have a plan. As ridiculous as it might be, I have a plan. Someday, when they interview me, I'll tell them exactly what I'm going to do with the money. I have a list of things that has been very consistent for years. When that day comes and I win, it's just a simple process of checking off my list. I might do some stupid things with the winnings, but I'll have done a lot of smart things too. Hopefully the smart will greatly outweigh the dumb.



                              Step #2: Handle your money wisely today. You don't need to win the lottery to have a financial advisor. If you have any money available for investing, you should have one. I have one I've worked with for 20 years. Should I win the lottery tomorrow, I've already got a trusted advisor in place.



                              Start preparing now for that big win. Even if it never happens, you will be much better off at least thinking about your money and planning your future. Hopefully you will start putting the pieces in place that will help you plan for that future with or without a massive windfall.






                              share|improve this answer













                              I seriously doubt that all, or even most lottery winners lose all their money within 1-2 years, but, whatever. You don't need to win the lottery to lose your money on casinos and hookers, poor investment choices, etc. Plenty of people accomplish that just fine without a massive windfall driving it.



                              Preparation is the key. I often joke about what I would do if I win the lottery, but to a certain extent, it's not really a joke. How often have you seen a lottery winner get interviewed, and when asked what they are going to do with the money, they say, "Oh my gosh, I don't know!" Sadly, they really don't know, which is maddening, because why would you buy a ticket without at least dreaming of winning?



                              Step #1: Have a plan. As ridiculous as it might be, I have a plan. Someday, when they interview me, I'll tell them exactly what I'm going to do with the money. I have a list of things that has been very consistent for years. When that day comes and I win, it's just a simple process of checking off my list. I might do some stupid things with the winnings, but I'll have done a lot of smart things too. Hopefully the smart will greatly outweigh the dumb.



                              Step #2: Handle your money wisely today. You don't need to win the lottery to have a financial advisor. If you have any money available for investing, you should have one. I have one I've worked with for 20 years. Should I win the lottery tomorrow, I've already got a trusted advisor in place.



                              Start preparing now for that big win. Even if it never happens, you will be much better off at least thinking about your money and planning your future. Hopefully you will start putting the pieces in place that will help you plan for that future with or without a massive windfall.







                              share|improve this answer












                              share|improve this answer



                              share|improve this answer










                              answered 16 hours ago









                              MohairMohair

                              33615




                              33615





















                                  0














                                  People overextend



                                  First problem: you're not as rich as you think you are. Say you just won $768 million from the PowerBall Lottery. You have the following reductions:



                                  1. That's the thirty year annuity amount. The cash amount is more like $400 million.

                                  2. Taxes. Figure on keeping half, or $200 million.

                                  OK, but $200 million still seems like a lot of money. But look at the changes you're making.



                                  1. If you're 30 and quit your jobs (married couple), that's about $60,000 a year for forty years. There's $2.4 million gone.

                                  2. You buy $100 million in houses: a $40 million mansion; a $20 million vacation house; another $20 million vacation house; several more million dollar houses for friends and family.

                                  3. Buy cars for everyone.

                                  4. Buy more expensive food and travel (first class of course).

                                  5. Buy expensive wine/champagne, even though you don't know why it's more expensive.

                                  6. Cosign some loans.

                                  7. Invest in some sure things.

                                  So after you find out that your sure thing investments are worthless, you find that your cosigned loans are due since your friends and family couldn't afford them. Then you realize that your houses cost money after the purchase as well. You have to pay property taxes and utilities as well as pay people to take care of the houses when you aren't there. You have a lifestyle that costs $500,000 a year to maintain but no income. If you live eighty more years, that's $40 million.



                                  Budget



                                  To avoid this, you have to budget. If you have $200 million after taxes, put most of it, say $150 million, into safe investments like index funds and a significant (albeit much smaller amount) into banks. A rough rule of thumb is that five years of expenses should be in banks after retiring. Each year, take a portion of the amount from your investments, say 2%, and put it in your bank accounts. That's the money on which you live.



                                  You have $50 million remaining. This is the money that you can use for capital purchases, like houses. First divide it in two. This is because capital purchases have expenses. Now you have $25 million in savings and $25 million that you can spend. Spend the $25 million. Now, only use the $25 million in savings to pay off maintenance costs on your purchases.



                                  Never borrow



                                  It's easy to borrow when you have lots of money. But while you have wealth, you have no separate income. There's no reason to borrow. Any money you will have, you already have. Borrowing shifts future income's spending power into the present. But you have no future income. You are better off spending the money now and saving the interest. If you've already spent all your money for the year, then you really don't want to spend more. Sell a car or vacation home instead. Borrowing is a sign of overextension when you are retired. Don't do it.






                                  share|improve this answer



























                                    0














                                    People overextend



                                    First problem: you're not as rich as you think you are. Say you just won $768 million from the PowerBall Lottery. You have the following reductions:



                                    1. That's the thirty year annuity amount. The cash amount is more like $400 million.

                                    2. Taxes. Figure on keeping half, or $200 million.

                                    OK, but $200 million still seems like a lot of money. But look at the changes you're making.



                                    1. If you're 30 and quit your jobs (married couple), that's about $60,000 a year for forty years. There's $2.4 million gone.

                                    2. You buy $100 million in houses: a $40 million mansion; a $20 million vacation house; another $20 million vacation house; several more million dollar houses for friends and family.

                                    3. Buy cars for everyone.

                                    4. Buy more expensive food and travel (first class of course).

                                    5. Buy expensive wine/champagne, even though you don't know why it's more expensive.

                                    6. Cosign some loans.

                                    7. Invest in some sure things.

                                    So after you find out that your sure thing investments are worthless, you find that your cosigned loans are due since your friends and family couldn't afford them. Then you realize that your houses cost money after the purchase as well. You have to pay property taxes and utilities as well as pay people to take care of the houses when you aren't there. You have a lifestyle that costs $500,000 a year to maintain but no income. If you live eighty more years, that's $40 million.



                                    Budget



                                    To avoid this, you have to budget. If you have $200 million after taxes, put most of it, say $150 million, into safe investments like index funds and a significant (albeit much smaller amount) into banks. A rough rule of thumb is that five years of expenses should be in banks after retiring. Each year, take a portion of the amount from your investments, say 2%, and put it in your bank accounts. That's the money on which you live.



                                    You have $50 million remaining. This is the money that you can use for capital purchases, like houses. First divide it in two. This is because capital purchases have expenses. Now you have $25 million in savings and $25 million that you can spend. Spend the $25 million. Now, only use the $25 million in savings to pay off maintenance costs on your purchases.



                                    Never borrow



                                    It's easy to borrow when you have lots of money. But while you have wealth, you have no separate income. There's no reason to borrow. Any money you will have, you already have. Borrowing shifts future income's spending power into the present. But you have no future income. You are better off spending the money now and saving the interest. If you've already spent all your money for the year, then you really don't want to spend more. Sell a car or vacation home instead. Borrowing is a sign of overextension when you are retired. Don't do it.






                                    share|improve this answer

























                                      0












                                      0








                                      0







                                      People overextend



                                      First problem: you're not as rich as you think you are. Say you just won $768 million from the PowerBall Lottery. You have the following reductions:



                                      1. That's the thirty year annuity amount. The cash amount is more like $400 million.

                                      2. Taxes. Figure on keeping half, or $200 million.

                                      OK, but $200 million still seems like a lot of money. But look at the changes you're making.



                                      1. If you're 30 and quit your jobs (married couple), that's about $60,000 a year for forty years. There's $2.4 million gone.

                                      2. You buy $100 million in houses: a $40 million mansion; a $20 million vacation house; another $20 million vacation house; several more million dollar houses for friends and family.

                                      3. Buy cars for everyone.

                                      4. Buy more expensive food and travel (first class of course).

                                      5. Buy expensive wine/champagne, even though you don't know why it's more expensive.

                                      6. Cosign some loans.

                                      7. Invest in some sure things.

                                      So after you find out that your sure thing investments are worthless, you find that your cosigned loans are due since your friends and family couldn't afford them. Then you realize that your houses cost money after the purchase as well. You have to pay property taxes and utilities as well as pay people to take care of the houses when you aren't there. You have a lifestyle that costs $500,000 a year to maintain but no income. If you live eighty more years, that's $40 million.



                                      Budget



                                      To avoid this, you have to budget. If you have $200 million after taxes, put most of it, say $150 million, into safe investments like index funds and a significant (albeit much smaller amount) into banks. A rough rule of thumb is that five years of expenses should be in banks after retiring. Each year, take a portion of the amount from your investments, say 2%, and put it in your bank accounts. That's the money on which you live.



                                      You have $50 million remaining. This is the money that you can use for capital purchases, like houses. First divide it in two. This is because capital purchases have expenses. Now you have $25 million in savings and $25 million that you can spend. Spend the $25 million. Now, only use the $25 million in savings to pay off maintenance costs on your purchases.



                                      Never borrow



                                      It's easy to borrow when you have lots of money. But while you have wealth, you have no separate income. There's no reason to borrow. Any money you will have, you already have. Borrowing shifts future income's spending power into the present. But you have no future income. You are better off spending the money now and saving the interest. If you've already spent all your money for the year, then you really don't want to spend more. Sell a car or vacation home instead. Borrowing is a sign of overextension when you are retired. Don't do it.






                                      share|improve this answer













                                      People overextend



                                      First problem: you're not as rich as you think you are. Say you just won $768 million from the PowerBall Lottery. You have the following reductions:



                                      1. That's the thirty year annuity amount. The cash amount is more like $400 million.

                                      2. Taxes. Figure on keeping half, or $200 million.

                                      OK, but $200 million still seems like a lot of money. But look at the changes you're making.



                                      1. If you're 30 and quit your jobs (married couple), that's about $60,000 a year for forty years. There's $2.4 million gone.

                                      2. You buy $100 million in houses: a $40 million mansion; a $20 million vacation house; another $20 million vacation house; several more million dollar houses for friends and family.

                                      3. Buy cars for everyone.

                                      4. Buy more expensive food and travel (first class of course).

                                      5. Buy expensive wine/champagne, even though you don't know why it's more expensive.

                                      6. Cosign some loans.

                                      7. Invest in some sure things.

                                      So after you find out that your sure thing investments are worthless, you find that your cosigned loans are due since your friends and family couldn't afford them. Then you realize that your houses cost money after the purchase as well. You have to pay property taxes and utilities as well as pay people to take care of the houses when you aren't there. You have a lifestyle that costs $500,000 a year to maintain but no income. If you live eighty more years, that's $40 million.



                                      Budget



                                      To avoid this, you have to budget. If you have $200 million after taxes, put most of it, say $150 million, into safe investments like index funds and a significant (albeit much smaller amount) into banks. A rough rule of thumb is that five years of expenses should be in banks after retiring. Each year, take a portion of the amount from your investments, say 2%, and put it in your bank accounts. That's the money on which you live.



                                      You have $50 million remaining. This is the money that you can use for capital purchases, like houses. First divide it in two. This is because capital purchases have expenses. Now you have $25 million in savings and $25 million that you can spend. Spend the $25 million. Now, only use the $25 million in savings to pay off maintenance costs on your purchases.



                                      Never borrow



                                      It's easy to borrow when you have lots of money. But while you have wealth, you have no separate income. There's no reason to borrow. Any money you will have, you already have. Borrowing shifts future income's spending power into the present. But you have no future income. You are better off spending the money now and saving the interest. If you've already spent all your money for the year, then you really don't want to spend more. Sell a car or vacation home instead. Borrowing is a sign of overextension when you are retired. Don't do it.







                                      share|improve this answer












                                      share|improve this answer



                                      share|improve this answer










                                      answered 6 hours ago









                                      BrythanBrythan

                                      17.8k64059




                                      17.8k64059




















                                          And is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.









                                          draft saved

                                          draft discarded


















                                          And is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.












                                          And is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.











                                          And is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.














                                          Thanks for contributing an answer to Personal Finance & Money Stack Exchange!


                                          • Please be sure to answer the question. Provide details and share your research!

                                          But avoid


                                          • Asking for help, clarification, or responding to other answers.

                                          • Making statements based on opinion; back them up with references or personal experience.

                                          To learn more, see our tips on writing great answers.




                                          draft saved


                                          draft discarded














                                          StackExchange.ready(
                                          function ()
                                          StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fmoney.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f107110%2fwon-the-lottery-how-do-i-keep-the-money%23new-answer', 'question_page');

                                          );

                                          Post as a guest















                                          Required, but never shown





















































                                          Required, but never shown














                                          Required, but never shown












                                          Required, but never shown







                                          Required, but never shown

































                                          Required, but never shown














                                          Required, but never shown












                                          Required, but never shown







                                          Required, but never shown







                                          Popular posts from this blog

                                          Styletc

                                          Tórshavn Kliima | Partnerstääden | Luke uk diar | Nawigatsjuun62° 1′ N, 6° 46′ W62° 1′ 0″ N, 6° 46′ 0″ WWMOTórshavn